IAS 36 · Manufacturing

Impairment Calculator
for Manufacturing

Calculate value in use for manufacturing plant, equipment, and production-line CGUs. Built for the capital-intensive asset bases typical in mid-market manufacturing.

IAS 36 · LIVEv2026.04DCF

Impairment testing, audit-ready.
Not just calculated.

Session
0x8F98
Period
FY 2026
Rate
inputs.conf
dcf.model
README.md
01// engagement— IAS 36.126
02entity_name=
03cgu_name=
04reporting_period=
07// asset— IAS 36.6 · .80-81
08carrying_amount=
CGU / goodwill allocation — tick any met (IAS 36.80-81):
10
11
12
13
14
16cgu.rationale=
CGU + goodwill allocation rationale (IAS 36.80-81)
18// discount_model— IAS 36.55-57
19pre_tax_discount_rate=%
20terminal_growth_rate=%
21forecast_years=
IAS 36.33
Rate derivation factors (IAS 36.55-57 / A17-A21):
23
24
25
26
27
29rate.rationale=
Discount rate derivation · WACC + gross-up (IAS 36.55-57)
32// cash_flows— IAS 36.33-38 · net
33cf_year_1=
34cf_year_2=
35cf_year_3=
36cf_year_4=
37cf_year_5=
40// cash_flow_basis— IAS 36.33-38 · forecast rigour
Forecast basis complies with (tick each confirmed):
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48forecast.rationale=
Cash flow forecast basis (IAS 36.33-38)
52// impairment_indicators— IAS 36.12
External sources
53IAS 36.12(a)
54IAS 36.12(b)
55IAS 36.12(c)
56IAS 36.12(d)
Internal sources
57IAS 36.12(e)
58IAS 36.12(f)
59IAS 36.12(g)
60indicators.narrative=
Impairment indicators · external + internal (IAS 36.12)
64// fvlcd— IAS 36.18-19 · IFRS 13
65fvlcd_mode=
66fvlcd_amount=
67fair_value_level=
68fvlcd.rationale=
FVLCD · IAS 36.18-19 + IFRS 13 hierarchy
72// prior_year_comparison— year-on-year VIU trend
73prior_year_viu=
Enter prior year VIU to see year-on-year trend.
Prior year VIU comparison · trend
76// sensitivity_analysis— IAS 36.134(f) · rate × growth
Enter DCF inputs to compute the sensitivity grid.
Sensitivity analysis · rate × growth grid (IAS 36.134(f))
82// risk_warnings— rule engine · ISA 540
Enter DCF inputs to run risk analysis.
Risk warnings · 7-rule engine (ISA 540)
88// disclosure_and_conclusion— IAS 36.126-134
Tick disclosure items addressed in FS note:
89IAS 36.126
90IAS 36.130(a)
91IAS 36.130(b)
92IAS 36.130(c)-(d)
93IAS 36.130(e)
94IAS 36.130(g)
95IAS 36.134(a)
96IAS 36.134(d)(i)-(ii)
97IAS 36.134(d)(iv)
98IAS 36.134(f)
99IAS 36.130(f)
99conclusion.narrative=
Disclosure checklist + conclusion (IAS 36.126-134)
awaiting input·0/11 fields · 0 errorsEUR·DCF · 5yr
previewias36-wp-cgu-2026.pdf
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Value in Use
Awaiting input
TOTAL
Recoverable Amount
max(VIU, FVLCD)
Headroom
RA − carrying amount
Breakeven Rate
Rate where VIU = CA
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IAS 36 impairment testing for Manufacturing

Manufacturing entities carry heavy fixed-asset balances. Property, plant, and equipment often represents 40% to 60% of total assets on a mid-market manufacturer's balance sheet. That concentration means even a modest impairment charge can materially affect reported profit and net assets. IAS 36.9 lists several indicators especially relevant to manufacturers: significant decline in an asset's market value beyond normal depreciation, evidence of physical damage or obsolescence, and internal reporting showing an asset's economic performance is worse than expected. In cyclical industries like automotive components or steel fabrication, external indicators such as declining commodity prices or loss of a major customer contract can trigger testing across multiple CGUs simultaneously.

Defining CGUs is where most manufacturing impairment tests get complicated. IAS 36.66 defines a CGU as the smallest group of assets generating cash inflows largely independent of other assets. For a manufacturer running three production lines in one factory, the question is whether each line is a separate CGU or whether the factory as a whole is the CGU. The answer depends on whether each line's output is sold independently or fed into a shared downstream process. Getting this wrong cascades through the entire test. If a CGU is drawn too broadly, profitable lines mask an impaired line. If drawn too narrowly, shared assets (the factory roof, the loading bay) need allocating under IAS 36.102, which adds complexity and judgment. Auditors should document the CGU boundary rationale with reference to how management monitors operations internally, consistent with the indicators in IAS 36.69.

Audit inspections repeatedly flag two manufacturing-specific issues. First, preparers include capital expenditure for planned capacity upgrades in VIU projections, violating IAS 36.44(a). The cash flows should reflect the asset in its current condition, not a future improved state. Second, discount rates often fail to adjust for asset-specific risk. A production line manufacturing components for a single customer in a declining sector carries different risk from a diversified consumer goods line. Using one blended WACC across all CGUs, without adjustment, contradicts IAS 36.55's requirement that the rate reflect risks specific to the asset. Auditors working under ISA 540 should build an independent expectation of the appropriate rate range rather than accepting management's single figure.

When using this calculator for manufacturing CGUs, input the carrying amount of all assets allocated to the CGU (including any allocated goodwill and corporate assets under IAS 36.102). Set the discount rate to a pre-tax WACC adjusted for the specific CGU's risk profile. For terminal growth rate, manufacturing entities in mature European markets typically sit between 1.0% and 2.0%. The forecast period should match management's board-approved budget, usually three to five years. Run the sensitivity analysis by adjusting the discount rate up by 100 basis points and the growth rate down by 50 basis points to see how much headroom the CGU has before impairment is triggered.

Frequently asked questions: Manufacturing

How should a manufacturer define CGUs when production lines share infrastructure?
IAS 36.69 points to how management monitors and makes decisions about operations. If management tracks profitability by production line and could shut one line independently, each line is likely a separate CGU. Shared infrastructure costs get allocated on a reasonable and consistent basis under IAS 36.102. Document the rationale by reference to internal management reports and decision-making patterns.
Should a manufacturer include expected efficiency gains in VIU cash flow projections?
Only if the gains come from the asset in its current condition. IAS 36.44 prohibits including cash flows from enhancing or improving asset performance. If you've already implemented a lean programme and the gains are flowing through current production data, they're part of the baseline. Gains from a planned but uncommitted capital project are excluded.
What discount rate adjustments apply to manufacturing CGUs?
Start with a pre-tax WACC, then adjust for CGU-specific risk per IAS 36.55. Relevant factors include customer concentration, geographic exposure, commodity price sensitivity, and contract duration. A single-customer automotive supplier carries higher specific risk than a diversified FMCG manufacturer. Document the basis for each adjustment.
How does obsolescence affect impairment testing for manufacturing equipment?
Physical or technological obsolescence is an internal indicator under IAS 36.12(f). When equipment becomes technologically outdated (even if still functional), the entity must test for impairment. The VIU model should reflect reduced future cash flows from the obsolescent asset, and the entity should also consider whether the remaining useful life assumption in the depreciation calculation needs revising under IAS 16.

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